Conspiracy Against the State Defense in Oklahoma
A conspiracy against the State accusation usually starts with a claim that two or more people agreed to cheat a public entity. However, the State still has to prove more than suspicion, bad paperwork, or a business deal that went sideways. This guide is for people accused of conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma and trying to understand the charge, possible punishment, and defense options before court.
Because these cases often involve contracts, invoices, public money, licensing, records, or government programs, they can overlap with broader fraud and deception allegations. Still, the case has to come back to the actual agreement, the alleged object, and an act done to move that agreement forward.
Quick links
- What conspiracy against the State means
- Explanation of the law
- Key elements the State must prove
- Penalties
- Collateral consequences
- How prosecutors prove conspiracy against the State
- Practical guide if you’re charged with this crime
- What happens next
- Comparison to other crimes
- Key terms
- FAQs
- Example of this crime in the news
What is conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma?
Conspiracy against the State means prosecutors claim two or more people agreed to commit an offense against, or defraud, a public entity. That public entity can be the State of Oklahoma, a county, a school district, a municipality, or another subdivision.
The State also has to prove an act to help carry out the agreement. The penalty turns on the Class C2 felony rules and your prior-conviction history. For a first conviction, the sentencing box starts at 0–7 years in prison and a fine of up to $25,000.
Talk with The Urbanic Law Firm early
If you’ve been accused of conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma, reach out for a free consultation before you talk to investigators or try to explain the documents yourself. An Oklahoma conspiracy against the State defense attorney can help protect your rights while the paper trail, witness claims, and charging theory are still developing. Call us at 405-633-3420 or use our secure online form.
Explanation of the law
Under 21 O.S. § 424, this charge applies when two or more people conspire to commit an offense against, or defraud, the State of Oklahoma or certain public entities. However, the law also requires one or more parties to do an act to effect the object of the conspiracy.
A separate conspiracy rule, 21 O.S. § 423, says an agreement alone doesn’t amount to conspiracy unless an act besides the agreement is done to carry out the object. So, the defense often focuses on the difference between talk, planning, paperwork, and a true act in furtherance.
Public-money cases may also involve a false claim against the State theory. In addition, prosecutors may stack the charge with obtaining property by false pretenses, embezzlement, or racketeering if they think the same records show more than one offense.
Key elements the State must prove
The conspiracy elements track jury instruction 2-17. The State must prove an agreement, your connection to it, and an act after the agreement formed.
- An agreement by two or more people.
- The agreement can be argued from words, conduct, records, or circumstances.
- However, shared contact or a shared business role isn’t enough by itself.
- A charged object.
- The alleged agreement must be to commit an offense against a public entity or to defraud it.
- If prosecutors allege an underlying crime, jury instruction 2-19 addresses the elements of that underlying crime.
- You were a party to the agreement.
- The State must connect you to the agreement when it was made or show you knowingly joined it later.
- Because large document-heavy cases can include many people, role clarity matters.
- An overt act after the agreement.
- Jury instruction 2-18 defines an overt act as an act by any member done to further or carry out the agreement’s ultimate intent.
- So, timing can matter as much as content.
- Possible co-conspirator liability.
- Jury instruction 2-19A addresses responsibility for acts done by co-conspirators in furtherance of the conspiracy.
- However, the State still has to prove you were a member of the conspiracy first.
Penalties
A conviction carries felony-level sentencing. The exact sentencing box depends on whether the case is treated as a first conviction, a second or third conviction, or an additional subsequent conviction.
Conspiracy against the State is a Class C2 felony under 21 O.S. § 20M.
- First conviction
- Prison: 0–7 years in prison
- Fine: $0–$25,000
- Minimum service rule: 20% before release from custody or electronic monitoring
- Second or third conviction
- Prison: 2–10 years in prison
- Fine: $0–$25,000
- Minimum service rule: 20% before release from custody or electronic monitoring
- Additional subsequent conviction
- Prison: 2–12 years in prison
- Fine: $0–$25,000
- Minimum service rule: 40% before release from custody or electronic monitoring
Prior convictions can change the sentencing box. Because enhancement law can affect what sentencing range applies, any felony case needs a sentence enhancement review. Where a separate enhancement claim depends on 21 O.S. § 51.1, that claim must be checked against the class statute.
Collateral consequences
A conviction can affect your life beyond the courtroom. However, the punishment is only one part of the damage.
- Employment risk: A public-fraud allegation can hurt jobs involving money, records, procurement, licensing, or public trust.
- Government-contract risk: Vendors, contractors, and managers may face contract, bid, or grant consequences.
- Financial orders: A judge may order restitution if the State proves a loss tied to the conduct.
- Reputation harm: Public-corruption and government-money cases can create press, search results, and licensing concerns.
- Immigration risk: Noncitizens should get immigration-specific advice before entering any plea.
How prosecutors prove conspiracy against the State
Prosecutors usually build these cases from records and witness interpretation. So, the defense has to test both the documents and the story prosecutors attach to them.
- Messages and emails: Prosecutors may use texts, emails, meeting notes, and calls to argue there was an agreement.
- Contracts and invoices: They often compare original records, submitted records, and payment records.
- Cooperator testimony: A witness may claim you knew the plan or joined it later.
- Money trail: Bank records, vendor payments, and reimbursements can become the backbone of the accusation.
- Overt-act timeline: The State may claim a signature, submission, payment request, or licensing step moved the alleged plan forward.
Practical guide if you’re charged with this crime
What we look for first in a conspiracy against the State case
We look first at the alleged agreement, the alleged public entity, and the alleged act after the agreement. Then we test whether the State is turning ordinary business contact into a criminal agreement.
Defenses
- No agreement. The State may have proof of contact, but not proof that you agreed to commit or defraud.
- No qualifying public object. The alleged plan may not fit an offense against, or fraud against, a covered public entity.
- No overt act. The State may point to talk, preparation, or unrelated conduct instead of an act that moved the alleged plan forward.
- Withdrawal before the overt act. Jury instruction 2-20 recognizes withdrawal when the person abandons the agreement before any party commits an overt act.
- State failed to disprove withdrawal. If withdrawal is raised, jury instruction 2-21 puts the burden on the State to prove no effective withdrawal.
How we fight these charges
- Analyze emails, invoices, contracts, payment records, and phone data for innocent explanations and timing gaps.
- Separate your actual role from assumptions based on job title, access, or copied communications.
- Challenge cooperator statements by comparing them to records, incentives, and earlier versions of the story.
- Litigate searches, seizures, statements, and digital-evidence issues when law enforcement crossed a constitutional line.
- Build a clean timeline showing what happened before, during, and after the alleged agreement.
What The Urbanic Law Firm does to help
- Organize the document-heavy file so you can see what matters and what doesn’t.
- Explain each court setting, filing, and decision point in a clear way.
- Communicate with you before major events so you’re not guessing about the next step.
- Review discovery for missing records, weak assumptions, and evidence that helps the defense.
- Prepare you for interviews, hearings, and court dates without exposing you to avoidable risk.
Questions to ask your attorney
- What evidence does the State claim proves an agreement?
- What act does the State say moved the alleged conspiracy forward?
- Is the alleged object an offense against a public entity or a fraud against one?
- What records help separate my conduct from someone else’s conduct?
- How could prior convictions change the sentencing analysis?
Things you can do if you’re arrested for this crime
- Stay quiet about the facts until you’ve spoken with counsel.
- Preserve emails, contracts, invoices, texts, calendars, and payment records.
- Avoid contacting alleged co-conspirators about the case.
- Write a private timeline for your attorney while details are fresh.
- Follow all court orders, release conditions, and communication limits.
What happens next
After filing, the court may address bond, arraignment, discovery, and scheduling. In a felony case, prosecutors usually have to prove probable cause at a preliminary hearing unless the case proceeds by indictment.
Because conspiracy cases can involve many records, the early discovery phase matters. An Oklahoma conspiracy against the State defense lawyer can review the charging document, identify the alleged overt act, and test whether the State’s timeline actually supports the charge.
For a more detailed overview of the criminal process in Oklahoma, you can read more in our Oklahoma criminal process guide.
Comparison to other crimes
Several financial or government-record charges can look similar at first. However, the exact charge changes the elements, sentencing class, and defense focus.
| Charge | Core accusation | What prosecutors focus on | Why classification matters | Common defense issues |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conspiracy against the State | Two or more people agreed to commit an offense against or defraud a public entity | Agreement, public-entity target, and an act after the agreement | Class C2 felony sentencing with prior-conviction variants | No agreement, no qualifying object, no overt act, withdrawal, weak cooperator testimony |
| Obtaining property by false pretenses | Someone used a false representation to get money, property, or services | The statement, reliance, value, and intent to defraud | Value and statute choice can change the charge level | No false statement, no reliance, good-faith dispute, value problems |
| Embezzlement | Someone had lawful control of property and wrongfully converted it | Entrusted access, missing money, and use of funds | Value, role, and public-office facts can affect sentencing | Authorization, accounting errors, ownership disputes, lack of intent |
| Racketeering | A pattern of qualifying acts tied to an enterprise or unlawful debt | Pattern, enterprise, predicate acts, and financial tracing | A pattern theory can increase pressure and complexity | No true pattern, no enterprise, weak predicate acts, broken money trail |
Key terms
Conspirator
A conspirator is one who enters into an unlawful agreement between two or more persons in order to accomplish some unlawful purpose, or to accomplish some lawful purpose by unlawful means. (jury instruction 2-22)
Because membership matters, the State has to connect you to the agreement instead of only proving you knew someone involved.
Cheat and defraud
To cheat and defraud means to induce a person to part with possession of property by reason of intentionally false representations, including any tricks, devices, artifices, or deceptions. (jury instruction 2-22)
In a public-money case, that concept helps separate a billing disagreement from a claimed plan to wrongfully obtain public funds.
Overt act
An overt act is any act performed by any member of the conspiracy which is done for the purpose of furthering or carrying out the ultimate intent of the agreement, or which would naturally accomplish the object of the conspiracy. (jury instruction 2-18)
Because the State needs more than talk, the timing and purpose of the act can become a key fight.
Intent to defraud
Intent to defraud means a scheme to take property so as permanently to deprive the owner. (jury instruction 5-56)
For a defraud-the-State theory, intent can be the difference between a criminal allegation and a civil or contract dispute.
Property
Property includes real property and personal property. Real property includes every estate, interest, and right in lands, including structures or objects permanently attached to the land. Personal property includes money, goods, chattels, effects, evidence of rights in action, and written instruments effecting a monetary obligation or right or title to property. (jury instruction 5-56)
When the allegation involves invoices, payments, equipment, or contract rights, property definitions can shape what the State says was targeted.
FAQs
What does conspiracy against the State mean in Oklahoma?
It means prosecutors claim two or more people agreed to commit an offense against, or defraud, the State or another covered public entity. The State also has to prove an act was done to help carry out the agreement.
Can I be convicted of conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma if no money was paid?
Yes, depending on the facts. A conspiracy charge can focus on the agreement and an overt act, not only whether the alleged plan succeeded or whether money changed hands.
What are the penalties for conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma?
For a first conviction, the sentencing range is 0–7 years in prison and a fine of $0–$25,000. Prior convictions can move the case into higher Class C2 sentencing ranges.
Can the punishments for conspiracy against the State in Oklahoma increase if I have prior felony convictions?
Yes. The Class C2 felony structure includes higher sentencing ranges for second, third, and additional subsequent convictions.
Can a conspiracy against the State charge in Oklahoma be expunged?
Possibly, but it depends on the outcome, your record, and whether the case fits Oklahoma expungement law. You can read more in our Oklahoma expungement guide.
Example of this crime in the news
A report from the Oklahoma Attorney General described allegations that public-contract invoices from Brent Swadley of Swadley’s BBQ were inflated or fabricated in connection with state park restaurant work. That kind of allegation shows why conspiracy against the State cases often turn on records, timing, public-fund requests, and whether prosecutors can prove an actual agreement to defraud rather than a contract dispute or accounting fight.
This page is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Every case is unique; consult an attorney about your specific situation. Law last reviewed on May 22, 2026 by attorney Frank Urbanic. Page last updated May 22, 2026. Review the statutes cited on this page for the most current version of the law.
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